Thelonious Monk wrote: » I will never understand why people are so keen on having kids, I think I'm missing that part of my brain.
Auldloon wrote: » I’m 47 my wife is 40, we’ve got 2 under 25 months and we’re loving life
Raconteuse wrote: » There's that situation too. Sometimes you won't meet the right person until relatively late on. !
JupiterKid wrote: » Following on from the thread about grandparents and whether posters knew them and when they passed away, it seems the most posters knew at least one grandparent, and sometimes three or all four, even one or two instances where their great-grandparents were known to them. On the other hand, there are posters who either never knew any grandparents because they died before they were born and those who also sadly lost their parents at a young age. Is there something to be said for getting hitched and having your children whilst in your 20s or early 30s? When I was growing up, most of my friends’ parents married in their 20s and had the last of their children by their mid to late 30s. My own mother and father married in the late 1960s when they were 24 and 27 respectively, had my sisters in the two following years and I, the youngest of my siblings, came along when my mum was 32 and my dad was 35. My sister had her children in her early 30s. These days, most Irish people don’t seem to start a family until well into their 30s, for many reasons including wanting to establish a career before marriage, having a very active social life in their 20s, traveling, and of course the housing situation which has forced people to remain in the parental home until they are 30 or older. The fact that both parents must work full time has of course also raised the age at which women have children. Most of my friends who have children have had them in the past 10 years and we are all in our early to mid 40s now. A couple of them have told me that ideally they’d have had their children earlier as very young children can be very exhausting in your 40s - they require a lot of work and responsibility. Does it have to be this way? Or are the problems and challenges of having a young family relatively late in life overstated? Does society and the world of work need to change to make starting a family young easier for people? Is the trend of having children at an ever increasing age sustainable? Will something have to give?
Raconteuse wrote: » People are talking as if it's just one or the other however. There's an in-between. End of 20s to mid 30s seems the right age window, in my opinion.
A Tyrant Named Miltiades! wrote: » I suspect there are great advantages in being a little more mature when your kid(s) arrive. My own Dad was in his 50's when I was born, I'm aiming to rise to his mark but it isn't easy. I'm not wise, not patient, and I haven't lived through enough decades to teach my kid anything she can't learn from wikipedia.